And limit lvm conf in each os if using different lvm.kr if using lvm at all.
On Mon, 5 Aug 2019, 14:01 CMH, wrote:
> Unless needed for physical security reasons I do not like to encrypt
> disks.
> If the H/W fails you will recover nothing from the disk.
>
> I presume each is a boot/root disk for
Unless needed for physical security reasons I do not like to encrypt disks.
If the H/W fails you will recover nothing from the disk.
I presume each is a boot/root disk for the particular distro.
Just don't mount the 'other' disk, other being the distro you have not
booted from.
Each disk shoul
unsubscribe ! ðŸ˜
Andrei Grosu
andrei_gr...@fastmail.net
+40722395956
> On 5 Aug 2019, at 12:14, Vladislav Kurz wrote:
>
>> On 05/08/2019 11:08, Mostaf Faridi wrote:
>> Thanks for your reply
>> Your guide is good.
>> I want in linux mint Debian HDD can not mount and use it.
>> I want linux mint c
On 05/08/2019 11:08, Mostaf Faridi wrote:
> Thanks for your reply
> Your guide is good.
> I want in linux mint Debian HDD can not mount and use it.
> I want linux mint can not mount Debian HDD.
> I want find way to config my debian system to prevent other OS can not
> mount Debian HDD.
In that cas
On 04/08/2019 21:51, Mostaf Faridi wrote:
> I have Desktop PC with two HDDs . on first HDD, I have Debian 10 and on
> Second HDD , I have Linux Mint.
> File system on Debian is Ext4.
> When I boot by linux mint I can access to files on Debian HDD.Â
> I want this is not happen.
> I want all my files
Sorry, yes, I should not write that, or mention about the consiquence.
But if files on another disk are not needed, not want to be seen ever, is a
good tool/way of removing files even if millions of files in the same dir.
As I understood that these files should not be there, from the initial
requ
I would not recommend find -delete as it deletes files.
You can easily remove/change a HDD if it is an USB adapter for an M.2
drive. That is the most secure solution. If you want to be really secure
you would need to take your computer offline and take the M.2 drive
always with you.
Booting
On 04/08/2019 23:57, Ruslanas Gžibovskis wrote:
> 2) If you just do not want to see it, run: find / -type f -delete
OMG, I thought that members of Debian community would not give this sort
of malicious advice. That command deletes everything.
Please be nice to each other.
--
Best Regards
1) Unmount deb partition on mint and remove it from /etc/fstab
2) If you just do not want to see it, run: find / -type f -delete
3) before booting into hdd 1 remove hdd2. Before booting hdd2 remove hdd1
4) install Windows or bubuntu on both hdd
On 2019-08-04 15:27, Richard Owlett wrote:
On 08/04/2019 02:55 PM, *MORON* GM1 wrote:
RTFM.
Could not be bothered giving useful reply
Seriously, reading the documentation is a necessary recommendation. It
would have been useful to suggest WHAT documentation. I think the
suggestion of enc
On Sun, 4 Aug 2019 15:27:22 -0500
Richard Owlett wrote:
> On 08/04/2019 02:55 PM, *MORON* GM1 wrote:
> > RTFM.
>
> Could not be bothered giving useful reply
>
>
>
You don't think the advice about encryption was useful? I don't really
see any alternative, and a great deal of detail needs to
You didn’t quote the whole message, CNN
Aug 4, 2019, 4:27 PM by rowl...@cloud85.net:
> On 08/04/2019 02:55 PM, *MORON* GM1 wrote:
>
>> RTFM.
>>
>
> Could not be bothered giving useful reply
>
On 08/04/2019 02:55 PM, *MORON* GM1 wrote:
RTFM.
Could not be bothered giving useful reply
RTFM. Â
You’d be better off encrypting both drives, then using your key to access data
if you ever needed to. Â
Google is your friendÂ
Aug 4, 2019, 3:51 PM by mostafafar...@gmail.com:
> I have Desktop PC with two HDDs . on first HDD, I have Debian 10 and on
> Second HDD , I have Linux Mint.
>
I have Desktop PC with two HDDs . on first HDD, I have Debian 10 and on
Second HDD , I have Linux Mint.
File system on Debian is Ext4.
When I boot by linux mint I can access to files on Debian HDD.
I want this is not happen.
I want all my files can not accessing by other linux distro.
How I can con
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